National Post

80 skyscraper­s planned in Toronto to meet residentia­l, mixed-use demand

- Anika Syeda

TORONTO • Toronto’s crowded skyline could see scores of new skyscraper­s sprouting up in the next few years, more than doubling the number of tall buildings in the city, according to a new report.

“80 new residentia­l and mixed-use skyscraper projects are in various stages of developmen­t, 31 of which already have a completion date set,” according to research by Point2 Homes, a real estate listing site.

With 60 skyscraper­s — defined as buildings that exceed 150 metres in height — Toronto currently ranks number 17 among cities with the highest concentrat­ion of skyscraper­s, according to the Chicago-based The Council on Tall Buildings, which maintains a global database of tall vertical structures.

With the 31 buildings that have a set time frame, Toronto can expect to jump to 10th place, replacing Jakarta, Indonesia’s capital. even then, Canada’s most populous city’s skyscraper portfolio will be well below Hong Kong, which ranks first worldwide with 354 skyscraper­s — and more on the way.

Among the new towers in Toronto are numerous “supertalls,” a nickname for skyscraper­s over 300 metres in height.

The new structures would dwarf the 290-metre First Canadian Place, currently the tallest building in the country.

Indeed, developers of supertalls are vying for national first place. The One, a 1 Bloor West skyscraper already under constructi­on, will be the tallest building in Canada at approximat­ely 306 metres upon its completion scheduled for 2023.

Cresford developmen­ts has also put forward a proposal for a luxury 85-storey behemoth dubbed yonge Street Living (yysl) residences. The building was initially proposed as a 344-metre structure, aiming to be the tallest in the country, but may have to be scaled back in height.

“If completed, (it) will be one of the most impressive mixed-use buildings in the city,” Point2 Homes said in its report.

The sudden spike in skyhigh towers comes at a time of housing shortages in Toronto. The city’s burgeoning population is clamouring for more housing options at affordable rates, according to daniel Freeman, senior vice-president at Freeman real estate.

“We’re a world-class city and we have housing needs,” said Freeman. “That’s an inevitable function of a growing world-class city.”

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